FOOTBALL They All Ran Well T HE only correct guess on the out- come of the Yale-Princeton game was made, curiously enough, by the New Haven Railroad, which stuck its chin way out a full week before the event by putting up handbills which un- compromisingly picked the winner. The posters hinted that, since Yale was going to get its revenge this year, it might be worth while travelling to Prince- ton to see the game. If the New Haven is wise, it will stand on its record and re- tire for the season. Yale's record isn't quite as good. It has, however, with one excep- tion, knocked off a long row of heavier and better-equipped opponents. It might even have knocked off Dartmouth, the one exception, if it had been able to use Colwell that week. It might have held the Princeton team to fourteen points if it had been able to use Colwell for more than three plays. Really, the loss of one good man makes a difference in a squad as small as Yale's. As for what wilI happen to Harvard in the Yale Bowl this Saturday, we have our own ideas, one of which is that there is no such thing as consistency in football any longer. If you simply must know what's going to happen, we suggest that you try and pry the information out of the New Haven. Dartmouth seems an ob- vious favorite over Princeton, mostly because Princeton was thinking more about beating Dartmouth than it was about beating Yale. Princeton found the Yale line just as weak as it had been in the Brown game, ran up sixteen points on straight football before Yale could get its breath, and sat back to wait for next week. I t was almost as if the team had forgotten all about that lit- tle trouble with Harvard. Noone, it should be very clear now, is as quick to concede a victory as Princeton- especially when it's conceding the vic- tory to itself. Since this year's team has other weaknesses besides its vanity-the ends and the pass defence, to name two-the rest of last week's game was easy for Yale. Dartmouth, of course, may find Princeton quite another propo- sition by the end of this week. Yale, we thought, was awfully lucky on the way to its second touchdown, just the same. It seemed quite plain to us that Mott caught Frank's pass out of bounds. If the play had been dis- allowed, Yale would have been punting " instead of rushing on the next down. Games can turn on things like that. We'd have been happier if Colwell hadn't been sent into the game for those three plays. Although he'd been bound- ing around the field in practice, he had, after all, had his appendix removed just . a .month ago. He's a sturdy ' fellow-he was doing exer- ' . cises five days after his opera- . . .. ....... . . 11 -.. tlon-but a footba game " 1 -: . " isn't that important. At any . ,. rate, Colwell ran on the field at a critical moment, and punted out from behind Yale's goal. It waS a sad, wabbly little kick, not at all like his sixty-yard punts. Colwell could have been relieved then, but he wasn't. Two plays later he was at the bottom of the pIle, and when the other players had been unpeeled from him, he didn't get up. ARMY, on the other hand, wasn't fl. equal to winning a big game short- handed. The team looked a trifle soft, probably the result of an injudicious mixture of influenza and too many easy games. There is no Notre Dame alum- nus on the Army coaching staff, and Notre Dame had no reason to be as lenient as it was with Navy. It was the toughest day Monk Meyer ever had; he rushed the ball a dozen times for a net gain of just two yards. Mey- er's long scoring run was made through the second team, and though he was able to complete six passes, none.of them got Army anything. As we've intimat- ed before, Johnny Law of Notre Dame is an excellent scou . After Kobes, Army end, had to leave the game, and Preston replaced him, Preston and Stromberg switched ends whenever the play called for a pass to Stromberg, who managed to make a catch or two. How much more suc- cessful the maneuver would have been normally will never be known. As it was, Craig and Meyer, who alter- nated as Army's passers, usually found themselves in the embrace of four or fi ve Notre Dame players as soon as the) dropped back to passing position. Army, fortunately, has another week in which to get its invalids in shape to start against Navy. W E thought Columbia made rather easy work of Syracuse. The team looked like its old, competent self, even though Sid Luckman appeared to be 81 o"" -tc ,,0. \I ,,,.. "t' \) ...'0 4\-44'. .. :(, -- . '. ",:,:.'.:." --_:_- :. ::; :.::::>"" '. ::'....' 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